Some fans, it turns out, have been lambasting Platinum Games and Nintendo with angry Tweets and other digital shouting, demanding that the game be brought to more than just the Wii U - an unlikely scenario given the game's publisher.

So should fans be upset?

I guess I can't hold disappointment against anyone. I understand why exclusives have to exist - there's not enough to differentiate each console without at least some variety in which games are available, but that doesn't mean it's disappointing to hear one of your favorite games will only come to console you have no intention of buying.

And yet, gamers should probably stop and think for a minute before getting too worked up. After all, Platinum Games only had two choices in this scenario: They could either not make a sequel, or they could bring the sequel to the Wii U as an exclusive. Either way, non-Wii U owners are out of luck. Given their options, I think Platinum Games did the right thing.

Nintendo certainly did the right thing. They've cobbled together an exciting list of launch window titles, including first party and third-party exclusives, but also cross-platform releases. There seems to be no shortage of developers hopping aboard the Wii U train, and that's good news for Nintendo and Nintendo fans alike.

Frankly, I find the act of throwing a huge fit over this Bayonetta issue extremely offputting, short-sighted, and immature. Be disappointed, say you're disappointed, but refrain from cussing at the developer on Twitter; refrain from acting like an idiot. Surely we gamers can do better than this.

I refuse to be baited by these antics into leveling the "entitled gamer" accusation at anyone - it's a lazy, over-used cudgel no matter what these days - but seriously people, would you really prefer no Bayonetta sequel at all to a Wii U exclusive? Because that was the alternative outcome.

That's not entitled, it's downright selfish. The games business is a business. Nintendo publishing this is smart business, and Platinum agreeing to an exclusive is smart business, too. Disappointment is fine, but let's retain some perspective here.